book of changes
I Ching
I Ching in OmenHall answers not as a predictor of events, but as a map of change: where the situation stands, where it moves, which step is ripe, and what measure should not be broken.
64 hexagrams
The full guide to the Book of Changes: situation, advice, caution, and reflection questions.
How to ask
Strong question formulas, weak phrasings, and ethical boundaries.
Changing lines
How to read the primary hexagram, lines, and resulting direction without fatalism.
Daily I Ching
A soft daily attention practice: one sign, one risk, one step.
I Ching for decisions
How to compare two roads, see the cost of each path, and avoid handing responsibility to the sign.
I Ching FAQ
Short answers about trust, repeated questions, differences from Tarot, and safe reading.
Main rule of the chamber
The I Ching does not say “it will be this way.” It asks: what force is acting now, where change has begun, what measure preserves integrity, and which step is small enough to be honest.